Note: Clinging to money's forceful, false power remains prevalent among some men and women who are otherwise philanthropic and many more who are not. This clinging is understandable in light of these individual's legitimate fear that they will be socially abandoned otherwise. We tend to cling to what we know and what we are told is secure in scarce times such as this. False power, or force, drives the ruin. Power is reciprocal. Benevolence fosters resilient community. In agriculture, false power looks like killing everyone in the field except those whom I wish to consume. False power is not only cruel, it's suicide. Please watch ĀINA: That Which Feeds Us

"And most of all to share Aloha...to share love and to respect one to another. That's all I ask." ~Sabra Kauka in ʻĀINA: That Which Feeds Us